This is part of WTOP’s continuing coverage of people making a difference in our community, reported by Stephanie Gaines-Bryant. Read more of that coverage. When Cristina Mancini attended a technology ...
Local girls, ages 7 to 17, learned about coding at the Law Center’s “Build a Webpage in a Day” event, hosted in conjunction with Black Girls CODE and the Center on Poverty and Inequality. The ...
Black Girls Code CEO Cristina Mancini explains the difference between a mentor and a sponsor in the corporate world, as well as the sponsor who played a key role in advancing her career in the tech ...
Cristina Mancini has had a storied career. The CEO of nonprofit Black Girls Code worked at 20th Century Studios (previously 20th Century Fox) for more than 13 years, rising to the rank of executive ...
Families in Savannah with middle-school-aged students have a free camp option to consider this summer. Girls Code Savannah is offering a free camp at the Georgia Southern University Armstrong Campus, ...
On Jan. 4, computer charger cords crisscrossed the carpeted floors of the computer lab at Live Oak Public Libraries' Southwest Chatham branch. The cords connected to power strips placed at intervals ...
KALISPELL, Mont. — Code Girls United announced the winners of their 2024 Northwest Regional App Challenge. The challenge featured 62 teams of girls in fourth through eighth grades from across Montana, ...
Girls Who Code taught its alumni hard skills. Now it wants to help them land jobs With efforts like a Technical Interview Prep program and Leadership Academy, Girls Who Code is equipping its former ...
Black Girls Code CEO Cristina Mancini reflects on the sponsor who helped propel her tech career. Black Girls Code CEO Cristina Mancini explains the difference between a mentor and a sponsor in the ...